| Chad Vangaalen | Kelliconnection (Sub Pop) |
| Written by James McAnally | |
| Wednesday, 11 October 2006 | |
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VanGaalen seems capable of simultaneously making Midnite Vultures and Sea Change if he were able to edit his own ideas.
Skelliconnection is not a departure from Infiniheart, insofar as its art school schizophrenic charm remains unscathed. The awkward Neil Young comparisons abound, but this bedroom shapeshifter resides somewhere much nearer to Beck. Particularly on "Mini TV's" and "See Thru Skin" which channels Mutations-era harmonica-toting, wobbly synth surrealisms. He has the kind of boundless creativity and curious talent Beck has carried to iconic status, but he lacks the focus to pull it off. As intriguing as it is to listen to VanGaalen's mind churn, it is this unbound creativity that ultimately cripples the album. Whereas Beck generally does his genre-hopping between albums, VanGaalen is reluctant to explore an idea for more than a couple of minutes at a time. VanGaalen seems capable of simultaneously making Midnite Vultures and Sea Change if he were able to edit his own ideas. Skelliconnection seriously picks up toward the back half, besting many of Infiniheart's breakbeats and synth stabs with a more developed ear for composition. The upbeat "Dead Ends" breaks out the best harmonica solo this side of John Popper's crash dieting. "Red Hot Drops" starts out like an amateur's exercise on Reason, but subtly morphs into a stately electo-acoustic jam. Veering in the direction of what made fellow Canucks Broken Social Scene so successful; "Burn to Ash" mixes his experimental and pop sensibilities perfectly. The greatness of these moments only serve to show the distance between his potential and the alienating tendencies he has to wander on to the next idea without ever completing a sentence. RIYL: Beck, The Flaming Lips, Fruit Bats |